| The barley was first allowed to germinate, or sprout rootlets, in a moist environment. |
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| Below the cervical enlargement, the dorsal rootlets, roots and ganglia diminish rapidly in size. |
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| Supplementations of hormones can, for example, promote growth of rootlets in tissue culture. |
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| An interphase cell contains four microtubule rootlets arranged in a cruciate array originating at the basal bodies and radiating outward, just under the plasma membrane. |
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| The cavity is about 20Â cm in depth and is lined with soft material such as shredded bark, grasses, rootlets and, often, hair. |
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| Most of the commercially valuable wild species derive their nourishment from the rootlets of living trees in a mutually beneficial relationship called mycorrhiza. |
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| During surgery, the tumor appeared firmly attached to the posterior nerve rootlets, but gross total resection of the tumor was performed with sparing of the nerves. |
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| The Catalan, Occitan or Breton languages represent the rootlets of France's cultural tree. |
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| It occupies deep burrows in the soil and feeds mostly on rootlets and bark from larger roots. |
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| Plants draw water from soil moisture through their vast network of root hairs and rootlets. |
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| The larvae develop in and on the roots, the young larvae feeding on fine rootlets and the older ones invading the root core. |
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| The second one, perhaps more important and yet invisible, is the very small rootlets that are constantly being metabolized. |
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| Sticks, leaves, algae, rootlets, and other plant fibres are used alone or in combination. |
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| To meet the rootlets of the host tree and the mycelium, an organization must be born to trade: the Mycorrhizae. |
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| The branches hold the leaves, and the structural roots do the same for the rootlets responsible for extracting nutrients and water. |
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| It uses extracts from newly-emerged plant material such as freshly gathered young shoots, rootlets and the inner bark of roots and stems. |
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| Clinging vines, which include trumpet vine, climbing hydrangea and English ivy, adhere to a surface with tiny aerial rootlets that grow from the stems. |
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| You can see rootlets growing in the ground and a drawing of a tree's root cap. |
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| The presence of tumour-like deformations, especially on the rootlets, is characteristic. |
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| Loosely constructed of small twigs, and lined with grass, fine rootlets, or moss, the nest usually contains three or four greenish eggs lightly splotched with brown or olive. |
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| Beneath the surface of some cells there is a network of fibrous rootlets or microtubular bundles that may provide support for the epithelium or coordinate ciliary beating. |
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| Both are deciduous shrubs that climb by aerial rootlets. |
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| At Van den Berk Nurseries, the trees are replanted on a regular basis which encourages the production of new rootlets in order to form fine root systems. |
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| The causes and sub-causes form the roots and rootlets, while the consequences and further effects are the branches and twigs radiating out from the trunk. |
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| In most cases secondary rootlets are colonized first. |
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| Sorting proved to be the most time-consuming part of the operation for it involved painstakingly going through hundreds of tiny mountains of rootlets and other debris. |
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| A part of the vineyard is plowed several times during the summer in order to maintain the structure and biological life of the soil and to cut the surface rootlets. |
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| Rye with long rootlets removed by the riddle. |
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| Dipper nests are usually large, round, domed structures made of moss, with an internal cup of grass and rootlets, and a side entrance hole. |
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| Look at all the rootlets on this plant! It's absolutely radiculose. |
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| These included patient 1 with a multiloculated cyst, possibly of arachnoidal origin, in which innumerable S100-positive nerve rootlets were entrapped in cyst wall. |
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